Aluminum

Get fresh, head-turning appeal with art on metal. Our environmentally friendly, aircraft-grade, alliance-anodized aluminum yields images with incredible vibrancy and texture while adding shimmer and modernity. Photos with bright colors like blues, greens, and reds print best on aluminum. If your image has white in it, the white area will show up clear, exposing the shimmer of the aluminum.

Paper

Canvas

Capture the timeless elegance and subtle texture of an original work with art reproduced on stretched canvas. Learn more about the 3 different display options available for canvas art by watching the video below.

Canvas

Select a Popular Style

Canvas Gallery Wrap

Traditional Canvas

Framed Print

Loose Print

Aluminum Floated

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Customize Your Product

Step 1: Select Material

Canvas

Paper

Aluminum

Acrylic

Birchwood

Step 2: Select Style

Canvas Gallery Wrap

Floater Frame

Traditional Canvas

Framed Print

Aluminum Floated

Acrylic w/ Standoffs

Birchwood

Aluminum Mounted

Loose Canvas

Acrylic w/ U-Channel

Loose Print

Step 3: Select Frame

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Note: This item is oversized and may be shipped freight. GalleryDirect will cover the cost of freight and liftgate service, but can only deliver the item to your door or front office.

Prints on Birchwood

Unframed Birchwood

Size Guide

**Please note if the image has white in it, the white area will show up clear on the aluminum and birchwood options, exposing the color of the material beneath.

Artist: Edvard Munch

Edvard Munch (December 12, 1863-January 23, 1944) is one of the most important figures in the development of modern painting. Born in Norway, Munch’s evocative and emotionally tumultuous work is often associated with the birth of Symbolism at the end of the nineteenth century, as well as considered to be an antecedent of the development of Expressionism, a major movement in the early years of the twentieth century. Though he lived most of his life in Norway, Munch spent 20 peripatetic years traveling around Europe, particularly France and Germany, painting and exhibiting the majority of his most well-known works. He lived a decidedly isolated and nomadic life, shaping his highly personal works, which are most often read as intimate examinations of the life of the mind and the psyche of mankind. Munch’s paintings, prints, and drawings have had an incredible impact on not only the history of art, but also the way in which we perceive art as an expression of our internal struggles.

Artwork Details

Between 1893 and 1910, Munch created four versions of the composition entitled The Scream. The three paintings and one pastel depict a figure in a tumultuous landscape with a horrorstruck, tormented expression. Originally entitled The Scream of Nature, Munch wrote in an 1892 entry in his diary that he was walking along a path in Oslo and Osensed a scream passing through nature; it seemed to me that I heard the scream. I painted this picture, painted the clouds as actual blood. The color shrieked. This became The Scream. The haunting image is one of the most sought-after artworks in the world, with the pastel selling in 2012 for over $11.9 million, the highest nominal price paid for an artwork at auction. It has also been the target of many thefts and heists, the most recent instance being the theft of the painting from the Munch Museum in Oslo in 2004. Luckily, the painting was recovered two years later. The Scream has been interpreted in many ways, including readings that liken it to the experiences of bipolar and depersonalization disorders. No matter the interpretation, The Scream has come to be one of the most iconic images of modern art.